Quote:
Originally Posted by Danzig
i guess if you want to view this as a bad thing, than it's making it more difficult to vote. or, you could think that maybe they're just making it difficult for non citizens to vote.
you have to be 18 to vote, most people start driving, and thus have a drivers license, at 16.
and if you don't drive, there are state id cards. sorry, don't see the big issue here.
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Read the current law and tell me how an out-of-state student in Wisconsin (living there for 4 years including summers on-campus, with no car) will be able to vote - including timeline for registration and ID and tuition proof requirements.
Then tell me why Wiphan isn't held to the same standards.
Then tell me why
different standards, applied to different voters, are legal and Constitutional.
Wisconsin just passed the most restrictive voting eligibility law in the country. I can't wait until it's declared unconstitutional under current law.
And that is the anti-big government, anti-government takeover, anti-discrimination, pure libertarian position <g>